Yes, both sides are using those words and I think most of them even mean it. But one side is talking about numbers of people who will die based on epidemiologist assessments and the other side, as far as I have seen, is not
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Replying to @1misanthrophile @JeremyTheRhino
I just want you to say it. I want everyone who thinks a relaxation makes sense to say it. Tell me how a quarantine relaxation for the sake of the economy will minimize human suffering when epidemiologists say it won't.
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Replying to @1misanthrophile @JeremyTheRhino
Tell me how saving the economy will save more lives than letting it tank and avoiding 10% mortality rates like we're seeing in Italy We need specifics to have this conversation because the outcomes will be very fucking specific
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Replying to @1misanthrophile
We could stop every motor vehicle death tomorrow if we got rid of every car. But as a society we don’t because we recognize that there are myriad benefits to having motor vehicles including often saving people’s lives. We all handle that calculus without this level of dialogue.
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Replying to @JeremyTheRhino @1misanthrophile
It is literally the same conversation. People will die either way. Questioning whether all indirect costs, including loss of life, have been directly calculated is completely fair.
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Replying to @JeremyTheRhino
It's definitely not the same conversation. The scale is very different. Car crash victims do not overwhelm hospitals and lead to spiraling mortality rates. Old and immunocompromised people do not disproportionately die in car crashes regardless of whether they're in the vehicle
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Replying to @1misanthrophile @JeremyTheRhino
Also, we definitely have dialogue about car crashes. We have speed limits, drivers tests, and so on. We have stats on how many people die under different conditions, and we change policy based on those stats
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Replying to @1misanthrophile
You’re making my point for me. There is a sliding scale that doesn’t involve an all or nothing approach. Okay, some speed limits but not too slow because it’s not worth it. You can drive, but not if you’re too dangerous because you’re young, drunk or have bad record.
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Replying to @JeremyTheRhino
Cool so let's talk about what that looks like It's super weird to me that you and everyone else with your position seem to avoid specifics Here, I'll start:https://www.statnews.com/2020/03/25/coronavirus-experts-craft-strategies-to-relax-lockdowns/ …
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Replying to @1misanthrophile @JeremyTheRhino
This article discusses ways we might responsibly ramp down the quarantine, all of which involve things we don't have yet: warmer weather, vastly increased testing, invasive tracking, and so on.
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So my position is: we keep or deepen the quarantine and put all our energy into medical masks, ventilators, and testing. Then, once we have better resources, we talk about relaxation. It's going to take a while. The economy will suffer horribly What is your position?
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